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Pan Am Flight 73

Pan Am Flight 73 was a Pan American World Airways flight from Bombay, India, to New York, United States with scheduled stops in Karachi, Pakistan and Frankfurt, West Germany.

Pan Am Flight 73
N656PA, the incident aircraft, seen in January 1985 at the now-closed Munich Riem Airport
Hijacking
DateSeptember 5, 1986
SummaryHijacking
SiteJinnah International Airport, Karachi, Sindh, Pakistan
24°54′24″N 67°09′39″E / 24.90667°N 67.16083°E / 24.90667; 67.16083
Aircraft
Aircraft typeBoeing 747-121
Aircraft nameClipper Empress of the Seas
OperatorPan American World Airways
RegistrationN656PA
Flight originSahar International Airport
Mumbai, India
Stopover Jinnah International Airport
Karachi, Pakistan
Last stopover Frankfurt am Main Airport
Frankfurt am Main, West Germany
Destination John F. Kennedy Int'l Airport
New York, United States
Occupants379
Passengers360
Crew19
Fatalities21[1]
Injuries120
Survivors358

On September 5, 1986, the Boeing 747-121 serving the flight was hijacked while on the ground at Karachi by four armed Palestinian men of the Abu Nidal Organization. The aircraft, with 360 passengers on board, had just arrived from Bombay.[2] A grand jury later concluded that the militants were planning to use the hijacked airliner to pick up Palestinian prisoners in both Cyprus and Israel.[3]

More than twenty passengers were killed during the hijacking, including nationals from India, the United States, Pakistan, and Mexico. All the hijackers were arrested and sentenced to death in Pakistan. However, the sentences were later commuted to life in prison. Neerja Bhanot, head attendant on the flight, was shot dead and posthumously received the highest civil award Tamgha-e-Pakistan from Pakistan as well as India's highest peacetime award for bravery, the Ashok Chakra Award, for her efforts to save passengers' lives.[4]

Hijacking at Karachi edit

Pan Am Flight 73 originated in Mumbai and stopped at the Karachi airport for a scheduled stopover at 4:30 a.m. It was carrying 394 passengers and 9 infants, an American flight crew and 13 Indian flight attendants. A total of 109 passengers disembarked at Karachi. The first busload of fresh passengers from Karachi had barely reached the aircraft standing on the tarmac when the hijacking began to unfold.[5]

Two hijackers dressed in the sky-blue uniforms of the Pakistan Airport Security Force drove up to the aircraft in a van fitted with a siren and flashing lights. They rushed up the ramp, firing shots into the air. Another two hijackers joined the first two men, one of them dressed in Pakistani shalwar kameez and carrying a briefcase full of grenades. There was also gunfire outside the aircraft reported around this time, which killed two Kuwait Airlines staff members working on an aircraft nearby. The hijackers fired shots at the feet of a flight attendant forcing him to close the door. Another flight attendant, Neerja Bhanot, was out of sight of the hijackers and relayed the hijack code to the cockpit crew, who subsequently exited the aircraft through the overhead emergency hatch, via the Inertial Reel Escape Device.[a][b] After about 40 minutes from the landing of Flight 73, the airliner came under the control of the hijackers. The exit of the pilots immobilised the aircraft.[c][5][8][7][9]

The four hijackers were dressed as Karachi airport security guards and were armed with assault rifles, pistols, grenades, and plastic explosive belts. The hijackers drove a van that had been modified to look like an airport security vehicle through a security checkpoint up to one of the boarding stairways to Pan Am Flight 73.[7]

The four hijackers were later identified as Zayd Hassan Abd al-Latif Safarini (Safarini, alias "Mustafa"), Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim (alias "Fahad"), Muhammad Abdullah Khalil Hussain ar-Rahayyal ("Khalil"), and Muhammad Ahmed Al-Munawar (alias "Mansoor"). Pakistani authorities also identified another accomplice Wadoud Muhammad Hafiz al-Turki ("Hafiz") and arrested him a week later.[7][10]

Demand for pilot edit

Within a short time after seizing control of the aircraft, the lead hijacker Safarini realized that the cockpit crew had escaped and therefore he would be forced to negotiate with officials. First and business class passengers were ordered to go towards the back of the plane. At the same time, passengers at the back of the plane were ordered forward. Since the aircraft was nearly full, passengers sat down in the aisles, galleys and door exits.

At approximately 10:00, Safarini went through the plane and arrived at the seat of Rajesh Kumar, a 29-year-old Kenya-born Indian resident of Huntington Beach, California, who had recently been naturalized as an American citizen. Safarini ordered Kumar to come to the front of the aircraft, to kneel at the front doorway of the aircraft, and to face the front of the aircraft with his hands behind his head. Safarini negotiated with officials, in particular Viraf Daroga, the head of Pan Am's Pakistan operation, stating that if the crew was not sent on the plane within 30 minutes, then Kumar would be shot.

Shortly thereafter, Safarini became impatient with the officials and grabbed Kumar and shot him in the head in front of witnesses both on and off the aircraft. Safarini heaved Kumar out of the door onto the ramp below. Pakistani personnel on the ramp reported that Kumar was still breathing when he was placed in an ambulance, but he was pronounced dead on the way to the hospital in Karachi.[citation needed]

Safarini joined the hijackers and ordered flight attendants Bhanot, Sunshine Vesuwala,[11] and Madhvi Bahuguna[12] to begin collecting passports. They complied with this request. During the collection of the passports, believing passengers with American passports would be singled out by the hijackers, the flight attendants proceeded to hide some of the American passports under seats, and dumped the rest down a rubbish chute.[13][non-primary source needed]

After the passports had been collected, Bhanot came onto the intercom and asked for Michael John Thexton, a British citizen, to come to the front of the plane. Thexton was returning home to England after visiting Pakistan for a personal pilgrimage to Broad Peak, where his brother, a keen mountaineer, had died of altitude sickness in 1983, and boarded the flight in Karachi to disembark at the Frankfurt stop and connect to another Pan Am flight for London.[14] He went through the curtain into the front of the plane where he came face to face with Safarini, who was holding Thexton's passport. He asked Thexton if he was a soldier and if he had a gun, Thexton replied "No". He ordered Thexton onto his knees. Safarini told the officials that if anyone came near the plane that he would go on to kill another passenger.[13]

Viraf Daroga told Safarini that there was a crew member on board who was able to use the cockpit radio and asked him to negotiate through radio. Safarini went back to Thexton and asked him whether he would like a drink of water, to which Thexton replied "Yes." Safarini also asked Thexton if he was married, and claimed he did not like all this violence and killing and said that the Americans and Israelis had taken over his country and left him unable to lead a proper life.[citation needed] One of the hijackers ordered Thexton to return to his seat.[citation needed]

Thexton had the opportunity to ask his hijacker about this experience forty years later, and ask why he had not been shot. The hijacker explained that when Thexton had told him that his brother had died and he didn't want to leave his mother childless that the hijacker had sympathy for him and let him go.[15]

The hijack stalemate continued on into the night. During the stalemate, Dick Melhart was positioned by the door and was able to unlock it when the firing started.[16] About 21:00 the auxiliary power unit shut down, all lighting turned off, and emergency lights came on. Passengers at the front were ordered toward the back, while passengers at the back were ordered forward. Since the aisles were already full of passengers, those passengers standing just sat down.[citation needed]

With the plane out of power and sitting in near darkness, a hijacker at the L1 door said a prayer and then aimed to shoot at the explosive belt worn by another hijacker near the door. The intent was to cause an explosion massive enough to kill all passengers and crew on board, as well as themselves. Since the cabin was dark, the hijacker missed, causing only a small detonation. Immediately the hijackers began shooting their weapons into the cabin at passengers and attempted to throw their grenades.[8]

Yet again the lack of light caused them to not pull pins fully and to create only small explosions. Ultimately it was the bullets that created the most damage since each bullet would bounce off aircraft cabin surfaces and create crippling shrapnel. An air hostess at the L3 door opened the door; although the slide did not deploy, several passengers and crew jumped down the fifteen feet or 6m/20 ft.[8] to the ramp.

Dick Melhart was able to unlatch the door at R3 which was the exit over the wing, passengers jumped out from this exit. A grounds staff trapped on board during the ordeal was responsible for opening the R4 door, which was the only door armed to deploy the emergency slide. Ultimately this slide allowed for more passengers to evacuate safely and without injuries. Bhanot and the other crew members bravely escorted as many passengers as they could first and then evacuated themselves afterwards.[17]

Rescue assault edit

The Pakistani unit responsible for taking the plane was the Special Service Group (SSG) which was led by Brig. Tariq Mehmood. The SSG Commandos closed in on the aircraft after the power unit went out but didn't begin storming the plane until they heard shots fired from within the plane. By the time the commandos reached the plane, many passengers had already begun escaping.[18]

There are some inconsistencies regarding the Pakistani Army's reported response to the generator dying. This confusion was later attributed to a rush by officials to take credit for a successful assault on the hijackers followed by a walking-back of statements once the death toll of the tragedy became clear.[19]

Passengers edit

The 365 total passengers plus crew on Pan Am 73 were citizens of 14 different countries. Citizens of India represented roughly 27% of the people on board the flight, and 24% of those killed. Citizens of three countriesIndia, Italy, and the United Kingdomtogether represented the bulk (71%) of those killed.

Nationalities edit

[citation needed]

Nationality Passengers Crew Total Victims
Australia 4 0 4 2
Belgium 2 0 2 0
Canada 30 0 30 0
Denmark 8 0 8 2
France 4 1 5 0
Germany 81 3 84 0
India 91 13 104 12
Ireland 5 0 5 4
Italy 27 0 27 13
Mexico 8 0 8 2
Pakistan 44 0 44 3
Sweden 2 0 2 0
United Kingdom 15 4 19 11
United States 44 2 46 2
Total 365 23 388 51

Cockpit crew edit

  • Captain William Allen "Bill" Kianka (born June 1, 1934), Age 52, He served in the U.S. Navy from 1952 to 1954 and fought in one tour in the Korean War, and was serving with Pan Am as a Captain since 1954.
  • First Officer Conway Tehan Dodge Sr. (born May 30, 1933), Age 53, He served in the U.S. Marine Corps from 1951 to 1955 and fought in two tours in the Korean War, and was serving with Pan Am as a First Officer since 1955.
  • Flight Engineer John Joseph Ridgway (born September 25, 1940), Age 45, He was serving with Pan Am as a Flight Engineer since 1962.

Aftermath edit

Trial and sentencing edit

On July 6, 1988, the five Palestinian men were convicted in Pakistan for their roles in the hijacking and murders and sentenced to death: Zayd Hassan Abd al-Latif Safarini, Wadoud Muhammad Hafiz al-Turki, Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim, Muhammad Abdullah Khalil Hussain ar-Rahayyal, and Muhammad Ahmed al-Munawar.[20] The sentences were later commuted to life in prison.

According to a CNN report, Safarini was handed over to the FBI from a prison in Pakistan in September 2001.[20][21][22] He was taken to the United States where on May 13, 2005, he was sentenced to a 160-year prison term.[20] At the plea proceeding, Safarini admitted that he and his fellow hijackers committed the offences as members of the Abu Nidal Organization, also called the ANO, a designated terrorist organization.

The other four prisoners were deported by Pakistani authorities to PA in Israel in 2008.[22][23]

Libyan involvement and legal action edit

Libya has been accused of sponsoring the hijacking, as well as carrying out the bombings of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988 and UTA Flight 772 in 1989.

In August 2003, Libya accepted responsibility for "the actions of its officials" for the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103, but was silent on the question of the Pan Am Flight 73 hijacking.[24] Libya offered US$2.7 billion in compensation to the families of the 270 victims of Pan Am Flight 103 and,[24] in January 2004, agreed to pay $170 million to the families of the 170 victims of UTA Flight 772.[25] The seven American UTA victims' families refused the offer and instead filed a claim for $2.2 billion against Libya. From 2004 to 2006 the US and the UK jointly opened up relations with Libya, leading to the removal of sanctions imposed and of Libya's inclusion on the list of countries that sponsor terrorism.

In June 2004, a volunteer group of families and victims from the incident, Families from Pan Am Flight 73, was formed to work toward a memorial for those killed in the incident, to seek the truth behind this terrorist attack, and to hold those responsible for it accountable. On April 5, 2006, the law firm of Crowell & Moring LLP, representing the surviving passengers, estates and family members of the hijacking victims, announced it was filing a civil suit in U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia seeking $10 billion in compensatory damages, plus unspecified punitive damages, from Libya, Muammar al-Gaddafi and the five convicted hijackers. The lawsuit alleged Libya provided the Abu Nidal Organization with material support and also ordered the attack as part of a Libyan-sponsored terrorist campaign against American, European and Israeli interests.[26]

British media that was critical of normalisation of relations between Gaddafi and the West reported in March 2004 (days after Prime Minister Tony Blair visited Tripoli) that Libya was behind the hijacking.[27]

As of September 2015 about $700 million of funds that Libya gave the US to settle claims related to Libyan sponsored terrorism has not been distributed to families of victims who were Indian passport holders.[28]

Reward and reported killing of accused edit

Zayd Hassan Abd al-Latif Safarini was extradited to the U.S. by the Government of Pakistan.[21][22] He is serving his 160-year sentence at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute, Indiana.

The other four prisoners were deported by Pakistani authorities to PA in Israel in 2008.[22][23] On December 3, 2009, the FBI, in coordination with the State Department, announced a $5M reward for information that leads to the capture of each of the four remaining hijackers of Pan Am 73.[20]

One of the four, Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim, was allegedly killed in a drone strike in Pakistan on January 9, 2010.[29] His death was never confirmed and he remains on the FBI's Most Wanted Terrorists list and the State Department's Rewards for Justice list.[30][31]

In hopes of generating new leads for the alleged hijackers the FBI released new age-progressed images on January 11, 2018. The case is still under investigation by the Washington Field Office of the Bureau.[32]

Aircraft edit

The aircraft was a four-engined Boeing 747-121 delivered to Pan Am on June 18, 1971, with registration N656PA[33] and named Clipper Live Yankee by the airline. It was later renamed and at the time of the incident was named Clipper Empress of the Seas. After the incident the aircraft was renamed Clipper New Horizons. Pan Am sold the aircraft to Evergreen International in 1988 and then leased it back. The aircraft was returned by Pan Am to Evergreen in April 1991. Evergreen scrapped the aircraft the next month.[34]

In popular culture edit

The film Neerja was released on February 19, 2016 depicting the hijacking and the actions of all the flight attendants on the aircraft. Neerja Bhanot was the Senior Flight Purser and the youngest recipient of the highest Indian bravery award, Ashoka Chakra. She also received the United States Special Courage award and the Pakistani Nishan-e-Pakistan.

A documentary about the hijacking, called Hijacked: Flight 73, was released in 2023. (IMDb).

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The Inertial Reel Escape Device consists of five metal cables attached to the roof of the cockpit. Up to five crew can reach the roof through an emergency hatch and slide down to the ground retarded by the cables.[5][6]
  2. ^ According to an India Today report, Neerja Bhanot, the head purser of the flight, alerted the cockpit crew.[5] But other accounts indicate that she had a gun pointed to her head at that time.[7][8]
  3. ^ The Pan Am executives supported the decision of the flight crew abandoning the plane. Martin Shugrue, the Chief Operating Officer, stated, "In a situation like this, one of our immediate prime objectives (is to) immobilize the aircraft, turn the aircraft into a building."[7]

References edit

  1. ^ "Jordanian Hijacker Sentenced in D.C. for 1986 Hijacking of Pan Am Flight 73 as Victims from Around the World Recount Horrors" (Press release). Washington, DC: Federal Bureau of Investigation. May 14, 2004. Retrieved November 9, 2017.
  2. ^ "Pan Am Flight-73 alleged hijacker 'killed' in drone attack in Pakistan". Asian Tribune.
  3. ^ "United States of America v. Wadoud Muhammad et al Indictment" (PDF). justice.gov. United States Department of Justice. June 11, 2001. Retrieved April 18, 2015.
  4. ^ . The Times of India. January 17, 2010. Archived from the original on August 11, 2011.
  5. ^ a b c d Dilip Bobb, M. Rahman, Zahid Hussain, and Ramindar Singh. Pan Am hijack in Karachi: Pakistan security forces handling of situation raises questions, India Today, 1986-09-30.
  6. ^ A video demonstrating the Cockpit Escape Reels on a Boeing 747-300, You Tube video.
  7. ^ a b c d e Ghosh, Flight 73: The Inner Story 2018, Chap. 2.
  8. ^ a b c d Mohan, Megha (March 31, 2016). "Inside a hijack: The unheard stories of the Pan Am 73 crew". BBC News.
  9. ^ . Federal Bureau of Investigation, US Department of Justice. May 13, 2004. Archived from the original on December 26, 2016.
  10. ^ United States of America vs. Zaid Hassan Abd Latif Safarini: Rule 11 Proffer of Facts, US Department of Justice, November 12, 2003.
  11. ^ Leonnig, Carol D. (May 13, 2004). "A Day of Horror in 1986 Is Relived". Washington Post. ISSN 0190-8286. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  12. ^ Mohan, Megha (March 31, 2016). "Inside a hijack: The unheard stories of the Pan Am 73 crew". BBC News. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  13. ^ a b Thexton, Mike (2006). What happened to the hippy man (1st ed.). Great Britain: Lanista Partners Ltd. pp. 48–50. ISBN 0-9553185-0-5.
  14. ^ "Pan Am flight 73 hostage learns from hijacker why life was spared". BBC News. May 2, 2023.
  15. ^ Deborah Linton (April 2023). "I survived the world's most infamous plane hijack – years later, the terrorist told me why". UK.
  16. ^ Markham, James M.; Times, Special To the New York (September 8, 1986). "Jet Survivors Say Army Didn't Help". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved February 21, 2020.
  17. ^ Shilpa Baburaj (February 18, 2016). "'I saw Neerja being shot in the head' | Bengaluru News". The Times of India. Retrieved December 21, 2020.
  18. ^ Aftab, Mohammed (September 6, 1986). "At least 17 die in hijack in Pakistan" (PDF). Manchester Herald. p. 1. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
  19. ^ Tempest, Rone (September 10, 1986). "Confusion Amid Pan Am Hijacking : Pakistani Rescue Effort: Case of Too Many Leaders". Los Angeles Times. Retrieved March 18, 2023.
  20. ^ a b c d "Act of Terror: Seeking Information Leading to Those Responsible: Pan Am Flight 73 Hijacking". U.S. Department of State. Retrieved June 25, 2016.
  21. ^ a b "Suspect in 1986 hijacking brought to U.S. for trial". CNN. October 1, 2001.
  22. ^ a b c d "Neerja Bhanot killing: FBI releases age-progressed images of 4 wanted hijack suspects". Economic Times.
  23. ^ a b "FBI releases age-processed pictures of four 1986 Pan Am hijacking suspects". Geo News. January 19, 2018.
  24. ^ a b Arieff, Irwin (August 16, 2003). "Libya takes blame for Lockerbie bombing". Independent Online.
  25. ^ Smith, Craig S. (January 10, 2004). "Libya Will Pay $170 Million In Bombing of French Airliner". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331.
  26. ^ "Victims of September 1986 Hijacking of Pan Am 73 File US$10 Billion... -- WASHINGTON, April 5 /PR Newswire UK/ --". prnewswire.co.uk. CROWELL & MORING LLP. April 5, 2006. Retrieved November 13, 2015.
  27. ^ Revealed: Gaddafi's air massacre plot, The Times, 2004-03-28
  28. ^ "1986 Pan Am survivors pin hopes on Modi". The Times of India. September 29, 2015.
  29. ^ , Los Angeles Times, 2010-01-16
  30. ^ "FBI most wanted terrorist : JAMAL SAEED ABDUL RAHIM". Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI).
  31. ^ "Rewards for Justice - Wanted for Terrorism - Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim". Retrieved September 10, 2020.
  32. ^ "New Images Released in 1986 Hijacking Case". Federal Bureau of Investigation. Retrieved January 12, 2018.
  33. ^ "FAA Registry (N656PA)". Federal Aviation Administration.
  34. ^ "Evergreen International Airlines N483EV (Boeing 747 - MSN 20351) (Ex N656PA ) | Airfleets aviation". www.airfleets.net. Retrieved September 10, 2020.

Bibliography edit

  • Ghosh, Tarak (2018), Flight 73: The Inner Story, Munich: BookRix GmbH & Co. KG, ISBN 9783743848634

Further reading edit

  • Deborah Linton (April 17, 2023). "'I survived the world's most infamous plane hijack – years later, the terrorist told me why'". The Telegraph.
  • Stettler, Jeremaiah. "25 years later, experiencing Pan Am hijacking still haunts Utahn." The Salt Lake Tribune. August 7, 2014.
  • "New Security Measures for Pan Am Airlines 2020-01-30 at the Wayback Machine." ABC News. December 6, 1986. Getty Images Clip #450000364

External links edit

  • Hijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network
  • Hijacking of Pan AM Flight 73: Significant Events, The United States Attorney's Office, US Department of Justice, 25 February 2016.
  • U.S. Department of Justice Attorney's Office For the District of Columbia Information on court proceedings of Pan Am Flight 73
  • "UNITED STATES ARRESTS KNOWN HIGHJACKER FROM PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS FLIGHT 73" ( 2015-10-10 at the Wayback Machine). U.S. Department of Justice. Monday October 1, 2001.
  • on the Pan Am Flight 73 criminal case
  • Crowell & Moring Pan Am Flight 73 civil suit October 15, 2007, at the Wayback Machine against Libya, Gaddafi and the five hijackers
  • Naqvi, Jawed. "This Karachi nightmare and that." Dawn. July 1, 2014.
  • For the book by Mike Thexton about his experience on Pan Am Flight 73, 'What happened to the Hippy Man?', see
  • Photos of the airliner at airliners.net
  • "Karachi hijack ends in bloodshed." bbc.co.uk.
  • Pan Am Flight 73 September 1986 Karachi ABC News Nightline, September 6, 1986. YouTube video. uploaded December 26, 2017.
  • Macneil, Robert, & Lehrer, Lim. "Flight 073: What Happened? What Next?" The MacNeil/Lehrer NewsHour. September 5, 1986
  • Inside a hijack: The unheard stories of the Pan Am 73 crew
  • Jet Survivors Say Army Didn't Help

flight, american, world, airways, flight, from, bombay, india, york, united, states, with, scheduled, stops, karachi, pakistan, frankfurt, west, germany, n656pa, incident, aircraft, seen, january, 1985, closed, munich, riem, airporthijackingdateseptember, 1986. Pan Am Flight 73 was a Pan American World Airways flight from Bombay India to New York United States with scheduled stops in Karachi Pakistan and Frankfurt West Germany Pan Am Flight 73N656PA the incident aircraft seen in January 1985 at the now closed Munich Riem AirportHijackingDateSeptember 5 1986SummaryHijackingSiteJinnah International Airport Karachi Sindh Pakistan 24 54 24 N 67 09 39 E 24 90667 N 67 16083 E 24 90667 67 16083AircraftAircraft typeBoeing 747 121Aircraft nameClipper Empress of the SeasOperatorPan American World AirwaysRegistrationN656PAFlight originSahar International AirportMumbai IndiaStopoverJinnah International AirportKarachi PakistanLast stopoverFrankfurt am Main AirportFrankfurt am Main West GermanyDestinationJohn F Kennedy Int l AirportNew York United StatesOccupants379Passengers360Crew19Fatalities21 1 Injuries120Survivors358On September 5 1986 the Boeing 747 121 serving the flight was hijacked while on the ground at Karachi by four armed Palestinian men of the Abu Nidal Organization The aircraft with 360 passengers on board had just arrived from Bombay 2 A grand jury later concluded that the militants were planning to use the hijacked airliner to pick up Palestinian prisoners in both Cyprus and Israel 3 More than twenty passengers were killed during the hijacking including nationals from India the United States Pakistan and Mexico All the hijackers were arrested and sentenced to death in Pakistan However the sentences were later commuted to life in prison Neerja Bhanot head attendant on the flight was shot dead and posthumously received the highest civil award Tamgha e Pakistan from Pakistan as well as India s highest peacetime award for bravery the Ashok Chakra Award for her efforts to save passengers lives 4 Contents 1 Hijacking at Karachi 1 1 Demand for pilot 1 2 Rescue assault 2 Passengers 2 1 Nationalities 2 2 Cockpit crew 3 Aftermath 3 1 Trial and sentencing 4 Libyan involvement and legal action 5 Reward and reported killing of accused 6 Aircraft 7 In popular culture 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksHijacking at Karachi editPan Am Flight 73 originated in Mumbai and stopped at the Karachi airport for a scheduled stopover at 4 30 a m It was carrying 394 passengers and 9 infants an American flight crew and 13 Indian flight attendants A total of 109 passengers disembarked at Karachi The first busload of fresh passengers from Karachi had barely reached the aircraft standing on the tarmac when the hijacking began to unfold 5 Two hijackers dressed in the sky blue uniforms of the Pakistan Airport Security Force drove up to the aircraft in a van fitted with a siren and flashing lights They rushed up the ramp firing shots into the air Another two hijackers joined the first two men one of them dressed in Pakistani shalwar kameez and carrying a briefcase full of grenades There was also gunfire outside the aircraft reported around this time which killed two Kuwait Airlines staff members working on an aircraft nearby The hijackers fired shots at the feet of a flight attendant forcing him to close the door Another flight attendant Neerja Bhanot was out of sight of the hijackers and relayed the hijack code to the cockpit crew who subsequently exited the aircraft through the overhead emergency hatch via the Inertial Reel Escape Device a b After about 40 minutes from the landing of Flight 73 the airliner came under the control of the hijackers The exit of the pilots immobilised the aircraft c 5 8 7 9 The four hijackers were dressed as Karachi airport security guards and were armed with assault rifles pistols grenades and plastic explosive belts The hijackers drove a van that had been modified to look like an airport security vehicle through a security checkpoint up to one of the boarding stairways to Pan Am Flight 73 7 The four hijackers were later identified as Zayd Hassan Abd al Latif Safarini Safarini alias Mustafa Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim alias Fahad Muhammad Abdullah Khalil Hussain ar Rahayyal Khalil and Muhammad Ahmed Al Munawar alias Mansoor Pakistani authorities also identified another accomplice Wadoud Muhammad Hafiz al Turki Hafiz and arrested him a week later 7 10 Demand for pilot edit Within a short time after seizing control of the aircraft the lead hijacker Safarini realized that the cockpit crew had escaped and therefore he would be forced to negotiate with officials First and business class passengers were ordered to go towards the back of the plane At the same time passengers at the back of the plane were ordered forward Since the aircraft was nearly full passengers sat down in the aisles galleys and door exits At approximately 10 00 Safarini went through the plane and arrived at the seat of Rajesh Kumar a 29 year old Kenya born Indian resident of Huntington Beach California who had recently been naturalized as an American citizen Safarini ordered Kumar to come to the front of the aircraft to kneel at the front doorway of the aircraft and to face the front of the aircraft with his hands behind his head Safarini negotiated with officials in particular Viraf Daroga the head of Pan Am s Pakistan operation stating that if the crew was not sent on the plane within 30 minutes then Kumar would be shot Shortly thereafter Safarini became impatient with the officials and grabbed Kumar and shot him in the head in front of witnesses both on and off the aircraft Safarini heaved Kumar out of the door onto the ramp below Pakistani personnel on the ramp reported that Kumar was still breathing when he was placed in an ambulance but he was pronounced dead on the way to the hospital in Karachi citation needed Safarini joined the hijackers and ordered flight attendants Bhanot Sunshine Vesuwala 11 and Madhvi Bahuguna 12 to begin collecting passports They complied with this request During the collection of the passports believing passengers with American passports would be singled out by the hijackers the flight attendants proceeded to hide some of the American passports under seats and dumped the rest down a rubbish chute 13 non primary source needed After the passports had been collected Bhanot came onto the intercom and asked for Michael John Thexton a British citizen to come to the front of the plane Thexton was returning home to England after visiting Pakistan for a personal pilgrimage to Broad Peak where his brother a keen mountaineer had died of altitude sickness in 1983 and boarded the flight in Karachi to disembark at the Frankfurt stop and connect to another Pan Am flight for London 14 He went through the curtain into the front of the plane where he came face to face with Safarini who was holding Thexton s passport He asked Thexton if he was a soldier and if he had a gun Thexton replied No He ordered Thexton onto his knees Safarini told the officials that if anyone came near the plane that he would go on to kill another passenger 13 Viraf Daroga told Safarini that there was a crew member on board who was able to use the cockpit radio and asked him to negotiate through radio Safarini went back to Thexton and asked him whether he would like a drink of water to which Thexton replied Yes Safarini also asked Thexton if he was married and claimed he did not like all this violence and killing and said that the Americans and Israelis had taken over his country and left him unable to lead a proper life citation needed One of the hijackers ordered Thexton to return to his seat citation needed Thexton had the opportunity to ask his hijacker about this experience forty years later and ask why he had not been shot The hijacker explained that when Thexton had told him that his brother had died and he didn t want to leave his mother childless that the hijacker had sympathy for him and let him go 15 The hijack stalemate continued on into the night During the stalemate Dick Melhart was positioned by the door and was able to unlock it when the firing started 16 About 21 00 the auxiliary power unit shut down all lighting turned off and emergency lights came on Passengers at the front were ordered toward the back while passengers at the back were ordered forward Since the aisles were already full of passengers those passengers standing just sat down citation needed With the plane out of power and sitting in near darkness a hijacker at the L1 door said a prayer and then aimed to shoot at the explosive belt worn by another hijacker near the door The intent was to cause an explosion massive enough to kill all passengers and crew on board as well as themselves Since the cabin was dark the hijacker missed causing only a small detonation Immediately the hijackers began shooting their weapons into the cabin at passengers and attempted to throw their grenades 8 Yet again the lack of light caused them to not pull pins fully and to create only small explosions Ultimately it was the bullets that created the most damage since each bullet would bounce off aircraft cabin surfaces and create crippling shrapnel An air hostess at the L3 door opened the door although the slide did not deploy several passengers and crew jumped down the fifteen feet or 6m 20 ft 8 to the ramp Dick Melhart was able to unlatch the door at R3 which was the exit over the wing passengers jumped out from this exit A grounds staff trapped on board during the ordeal was responsible for opening the R4 door which was the only door armed to deploy the emergency slide Ultimately this slide allowed for more passengers to evacuate safely and without injuries Bhanot and the other crew members bravely escorted as many passengers as they could first and then evacuated themselves afterwards 17 Rescue assault edit The Pakistani unit responsible for taking the plane was the Special Service Group SSG which was led by Brig Tariq Mehmood The SSG Commandos closed in on the aircraft after the power unit went out but didn t begin storming the plane until they heard shots fired from within the plane By the time the commandos reached the plane many passengers had already begun escaping 18 There are some inconsistencies regarding the Pakistani Army s reported response to the generator dying This confusion was later attributed to a rush by officials to take credit for a successful assault on the hijackers followed by a walking back of statements once the death toll of the tragedy became clear 19 Passengers editThe 365 total passengers plus crew on Pan Am 73 were citizens of 14 different countries Citizens of India represented roughly 27 of the people on board the flight and 24 of those killed Citizens of three countries India Italy and the United Kingdom together represented the bulk 71 of those killed Nationalities edit citation needed Nationality Passengers Crew Total VictimsAustralia 4 0 4 2Belgium 2 0 2 0Canada 30 0 30 0Denmark 8 0 8 2France 4 1 5 0Germany 81 3 84 0India 91 13 104 12Ireland 5 0 5 4Italy 27 0 27 13Mexico 8 0 8 2Pakistan 44 0 44 3Sweden 2 0 2 0United Kingdom 15 4 19 11United States 44 2 46 2Total 365 23 388 51Cockpit crew edit Captain William Allen Bill Kianka born June 1 1934 Age 52 He served in the U S Navy from 1952 to 1954 and fought in one tour in the Korean War and was serving with Pan Am as a Captain since 1954 First Officer Conway Tehan Dodge Sr born May 30 1933 Age 53 He served in the U S Marine Corps from 1951 to 1955 and fought in two tours in the Korean War and was serving with Pan Am as a First Officer since 1955 Flight Engineer John Joseph Ridgway born September 25 1940 Age 45 He was serving with Pan Am as a Flight Engineer since 1962 Aftermath editTrial and sentencing edit On July 6 1988 the five Palestinian men were convicted in Pakistan for their roles in the hijacking and murders and sentenced to death Zayd Hassan Abd al Latif Safarini Wadoud Muhammad Hafiz al Turki Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim Muhammad Abdullah Khalil Hussain ar Rahayyal and Muhammad Ahmed al Munawar 20 The sentences were later commuted to life in prison According to a CNN report Safarini was handed over to the FBI from a prison in Pakistan in September 2001 20 21 22 He was taken to the United States where on May 13 2005 he was sentenced to a 160 year prison term 20 At the plea proceeding Safarini admitted that he and his fellow hijackers committed the offences as members of the Abu Nidal Organization also called the ANO a designated terrorist organization The other four prisoners were deported by Pakistani authorities to PA in Israel in 2008 22 23 Libyan involvement and legal action editLibya has been accused of sponsoring the hijacking as well as carrying out the bombings of Pan Am Flight 103 in 1988 and UTA Flight 772 in 1989 In August 2003 Libya accepted responsibility for the actions of its officials for the bombing of Pan Am Flight 103 but was silent on the question of the Pan Am Flight 73 hijacking 24 Libya offered US 2 7 billion in compensation to the families of the 270 victims of Pan Am Flight 103 and 24 in January 2004 agreed to pay 170 million to the families of the 170 victims of UTA Flight 772 25 The seven American UTA victims families refused the offer and instead filed a claim for 2 2 billion against Libya From 2004 to 2006 the US and the UK jointly opened up relations with Libya leading to the removal of sanctions imposed and of Libya s inclusion on the list of countries that sponsor terrorism In June 2004 a volunteer group of families and victims from the incident Families from Pan Am Flight 73 was formed to work toward a memorial for those killed in the incident to seek the truth behind this terrorist attack and to hold those responsible for it accountable On April 5 2006 the law firm of Crowell amp Moring LLP representing the surviving passengers estates and family members of the hijacking victims announced it was filing a civil suit in U S District Court for the District of Columbia seeking 10 billion in compensatory damages plus unspecified punitive damages from Libya Muammar al Gaddafi and the five convicted hijackers The lawsuit alleged Libya provided the Abu Nidal Organization with material support and also ordered the attack as part of a Libyan sponsored terrorist campaign against American European and Israeli interests 26 British media that was critical of normalisation of relations between Gaddafi and the West reported in March 2004 days after Prime Minister Tony Blair visited Tripoli that Libya was behind the hijacking 27 As of September 2015 about 700 million of funds that Libya gave the US to settle claims related to Libyan sponsored terrorism has not been distributed to families of victims who were Indian passport holders 28 Reward and reported killing of accused editZayd Hassan Abd al Latif Safarini was extradited to the U S by the Government of Pakistan 21 22 He is serving his 160 year sentence at the Federal Correctional Complex in Terre Haute Indiana The other four prisoners were deported by Pakistani authorities to PA in Israel in 2008 22 23 On December 3 2009 the FBI in coordination with the State Department announced a 5M reward for information that leads to the capture of each of the four remaining hijackers of Pan Am 73 20 One of the four Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim was allegedly killed in a drone strike in Pakistan on January 9 2010 29 His death was never confirmed and he remains on the FBI s Most Wanted Terrorists list and the State Department s Rewards for Justice list 30 31 In hopes of generating new leads for the alleged hijackers the FBI released new age progressed images on January 11 2018 The case is still under investigation by the Washington Field Office of the Bureau 32 Aircraft editThe aircraft was a four engined Boeing 747 121 delivered to Pan Am on June 18 1971 with registration N656PA 33 and named Clipper Live Yankee by the airline It was later renamed and at the time of the incident was named Clipper Empress of the Seas After the incident the aircraft was renamed Clipper New Horizons Pan Am sold the aircraft to Evergreen International in 1988 and then leased it back The aircraft was returned by Pan Am to Evergreen in April 1991 Evergreen scrapped the aircraft the next month 34 In popular culture editThe film Neerja was released on February 19 2016 depicting the hijacking and the actions of all the flight attendants on the aircraft Neerja Bhanot was the Senior Flight Purser and the youngest recipient of the highest Indian bravery award Ashoka Chakra She also received the United States Special Courage award and the Pakistani Nishan e Pakistan A documentary about the hijacking called Hijacked Flight 73 was released in 2023 IMDb See also edit nbsp Pakistan portal nbsp United States portal nbsp 1980s portal nbsp Aviation portal1986 Bombing of Libya List of Pan American World Airways accidents and incidentsNotes edit The Inertial Reel Escape Device consists of five metal cables attached to the roof of the cockpit Up to five crew can reach the roof through an emergency hatch and slide down to the ground retarded by the cables 5 6 According to an India Today report Neerja Bhanot the head purser of the flight alerted the cockpit crew 5 But other accounts indicate that she had a gun pointed to her head at that time 7 8 The Pan Am executives supported the decision of the flight crew abandoning the plane Martin Shugrue the Chief Operating Officer stated In a situation like this one of our immediate prime objectives is to immobilize the aircraft turn the aircraft into a building 7 References edit Jordanian Hijacker Sentenced in D C for 1986 Hijacking of Pan Am Flight 73 as Victims from Around the World Recount Horrors Press release Washington DC Federal Bureau of Investigation May 14 2004 Retrieved November 9 2017 Pan Am Flight 73 alleged hijacker killed in drone attack in Pakistan Asian Tribune United States of America v Wadoud Muhammad et al Indictment PDF justice gov United States Department of Justice June 11 2001 Retrieved April 18 2015 24 yrs after Pan Am hijack Neerja Bhanot killer falls to drone The Times of India January 17 2010 Archived from the original on August 11 2011 a b c d Dilip Bobb M Rahman Zahid Hussain and Ramindar Singh Pan Am hijack in Karachi Pakistan security forces handling of situation raises questions India Today 1986 09 30 A video demonstrating the Cockpit Escape Reels on a Boeing 747 300 You Tube video a b c d e Ghosh Flight 73 The Inner Story 2018 Chap 2 a b c d Mohan Megha March 31 2016 Inside a hijack The unheard stories of the Pan Am 73 crew BBC News Jordanian hijacker sentenced to 160 years in prison for deadly 1986 hijacking of Pan Am Flight 73 as victims from around the world recount horrors Federal Bureau of Investigation US Department of Justice May 13 2004 Archived from the original on December 26 2016 United States of America vs Zaid Hassan Abd Latif Safarini Rule 11 Proffer of Facts US Department of Justice November 12 2003 Leonnig Carol D May 13 2004 A Day of Horror in 1986 Is Relived Washington Post ISSN 0190 8286 Retrieved February 21 2020 Mohan Megha March 31 2016 Inside a hijack The unheard stories of the Pan Am 73 crew BBC News Retrieved February 21 2020 a b Thexton Mike 2006 What happened to the hippy man 1st ed Great Britain Lanista Partners Ltd pp 48 50 ISBN 0 9553185 0 5 Pan Am flight 73 hostage learns from hijacker why life was spared BBC News May 2 2023 Deborah Linton April 2023 I survived the world s most infamous plane hijack years later the terrorist told me why UK Markham James M Times Special To the New York September 8 1986 Jet Survivors Say Army Didn t Help The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved February 21 2020 Shilpa Baburaj February 18 2016 I saw Neerja being shot in the head Bengaluru News The Times of India Retrieved December 21 2020 Aftab Mohammed September 6 1986 At least 17 die in hijack in Pakistan PDF Manchester Herald p 1 Retrieved March 18 2023 Tempest Rone September 10 1986 Confusion Amid Pan Am Hijacking Pakistani Rescue Effort Case of Too Many Leaders Los Angeles Times Retrieved March 18 2023 a b c d Act of Terror Seeking Information Leading to Those Responsible Pan Am Flight 73 Hijacking U S Department of State Retrieved June 25 2016 a b Suspect in 1986 hijacking brought to U S for trial CNN October 1 2001 a b c d Neerja Bhanot killing FBI releases age progressed images of 4 wanted hijack suspects Economic Times a b FBI releases age processed pictures of four 1986 Pan Am hijacking suspects Geo News January 19 2018 a b Arieff Irwin August 16 2003 Libya takes blame for Lockerbie bombing Independent Online Smith Craig S January 10 2004 Libya Will Pay 170 Million In Bombing of French Airliner The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Victims of September 1986 Hijacking of Pan Am 73 File US 10 Billion WASHINGTON April 5 PR Newswire UK prnewswire co uk CROWELL amp MORING LLP April 5 2006 Retrieved November 13 2015 Revealed Gaddafi s air massacre plot The Times 2004 03 28 1986 Pan Am survivors pin hopes on Modi The Times of India September 29 2015 U S airstrike reportedly kills terrorist Los Angeles Times 2010 01 16 FBI most wanted terrorist JAMAL SAEED ABDUL RAHIM Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI Rewards for Justice Wanted for Terrorism Jamal Saeed Abdul Rahim Retrieved September 10 2020 New Images Released in 1986 Hijacking Case Federal Bureau of Investigation Retrieved January 12 2018 FAA Registry N656PA Federal Aviation Administration Evergreen International Airlines N483EV Boeing 747 MSN 20351 Ex N656PA Airfleets aviation www airfleets net Retrieved September 10 2020 Bibliography editGhosh Tarak 2018 Flight 73 The Inner Story Munich BookRix GmbH amp Co KG ISBN 9783743848634Further reading editDeborah Linton April 17 2023 I survived the world s most infamous plane hijack years later the terrorist told me why The Telegraph Stettler Jeremaiah 25 years later experiencing Pan Am hijacking still haunts Utahn The Salt Lake Tribune August 7 2014 New Security Measures for Pan Am Airlines Archived 2020 01 30 at the Wayback Machine ABC News December 6 1986 Getty Images Clip 450000364External links editHijacking description at the Aviation Safety Network Hijacking of Pan AM Flight 73 Significant Events The United States Attorney s Office US Department of Justice 25 February 2016 U S Department of Justice Attorney s Office For the District of Columbia Information on court proceedings of Pan Am Flight 73 UNITED STATES ARRESTS KNOWN HIGHJACKER FROM PAN AMERICAN WORLD AIRWAYS FLIGHT 73 Archived 2015 10 10 at the Wayback Machine U S Department of Justice Monday October 1 2001 U S Department of Justice May 13 2004 press release on the Pan Am Flight 73 criminal case Crowell amp Moring Pan Am Flight 73 civil suit Archived October 15 2007 at the Wayback Machine against Libya Gaddafi and the five hijackers Naqvi Jawed This Karachi nightmare and that Dawn July 1 2014 For the book by Mike Thexton about his experience on Pan Am Flight 73 What happened to the Hippy Man see the book s web page Photos of the airliner at airliners net Karachi hijack ends in bloodshed bbc co uk Pan Am Flight 73 September 1986 Karachi ABC News Nightline September 6 1986 YouTube video uploaded December 26 2017 Macneil Robert amp Lehrer Lim Flight 073 What Happened What Next The MacNeil Lehrer NewsHour September 5 1986 Inside a hijack The unheard stories of the Pan Am 73 crew Jet Survivors Say Army Didn t Help Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pan Am Flight 73 amp oldid 1180753299, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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